Media Archives:
- 30-second episode preview (AVI, 2Mb)
- The Romulans secretly program Geordi, who can only sit and endure it.
Synopsis:
Geordi is kidnapped by Romulan forces and transformed into a killing machine through mind control.
En route to a vacation and seminar on
Risa, Geordi is kidnapped by the Romulans and subjected to days of brainwashing. While a double is sent to replace him at the conference, Geordi is forced to endure a painful series of mind-altering experiences designed to put him under complete Romulan control.
Meanwhile, the U.S.S. Enterprise is assigned to escort Klingon Ambassador Kell to the Kriosian system, where one of the Klingon colonies is fighting for independence. The governor of
Krios, Vagh, charges that the Federation is secretly aiding the rebels. Though Picard denies the accusation, Vagh produces weapons seized from the rebels which appear to be Federation issue.
When Geordi returns he has no recollection of his ordeal, having been planted with false memories of a relaxing vacation on
Risa. Shortly after his arrival, however, Data detects the presence of intermittent E-band emissions commonly associated with Romulan transmissions. Data tries to pinpoint the source of the emissions, and also works with Geordi to analyze the rebel weapons. The two quickly realize the rifles were manufactured by the Romulans to look like Federation guns.
Picard hypothesizes that the Romulans are plotting to drive the Federation and the Klingon Empire apart, which allays some of Vagh's fears. However, a short time later an outraged Vagh contacts Picard and informs him the Klingons have intercepted a shipment of weapons headed for
Krios, which originated from the U.S.S. Enterprise. Data's examination confirms an unauthorized transport was sent from a cargo bay, but the memory chips in the computer were erased to hide the perpetrator's identity.
As Picard begins an investigation, Klingon warships uncloak and surround the U.S.S. Enterprise. Ambassador Kell offers to go to Krios and invite Vagh to witness the investigation, ostensibly to convince him of the Federation's good faith. But shortly before Kell leaves, he summons Geordi to his quarters, where it immediately becomes apparent that Geordi is under his influence without knowing it.
Kell, who programmed Geordi to transport the weapons, commands him to kill Vagh when they return from the planet and claim he acted on behalf of Starfleet.
Kell's transmission to Geordi produces another E-band emission, which Data is able to trace to
Kell. Data quickly deduces what is going on and is able to stop Geordi just as he is making his assassination attempt. Kell is exposed as a traitor conspiring with the
Romulans, and he is placed in Vagh's Custody. With war averted, Troi begins the arduous task of deprogramming Geordi, who has no recollection of what has happened and is unaware of his participation.
Timothy Lynch's Star Trek: The Next Generation
Episode Reviews
Review Date: 5/25/91
WARNING: The following post contains spoiler information regarding
this
week's TNG episode, "The Mind's Eye". You know the rest.
:-)
...and the crowd is going WILD...
This is a keeper, folks. Stick in one of those _high_ quality tapes in
the
VCR, 'cos you don't want to let this one fade away.
Given that, of course, you should know what's coming next. Yep--one of
my
high-power, or at least lengthy, synopses. What the hell, I haven't had
one
since "First Contact", and that was three months ago. :-)
Here goes:
prepare yourselves.
Geordi's en route to Risa for an artificial intelligence conference and
some
general R&R. He tries to get comfortable on the shuttle, selecting
some
appropriate music and playing games with the computer. Suddenly, this
idyllic
setting is spoiled, when a Romulan Warbird decloaks right off the
shuttle's
bow. Geordi puts up shields and tries to call for help--but his
communications are jammed, and his shields quickly fail. A Romulan
transporter beam yanks him off the shuttle...
Several days later. (Geordi's supposed to be gone for quite some time,
so
there's no concern about where he is.) The Enterprise is heading for
the
Kriosian system with Klingon Special Emissary Kell. Krios, an
outlying
Klingon world, is fighting for independence, and there are "enough problems
on
the home planet" that the Klingons don't want to divert resources to such
a
trivial rebellion. Why is the Enterprise wanted? Well, the Governor
of Krios
is claiming that the Federation is arming the rebels, and Kell is heading
to
look at the proof. It was Kell's idea to bring along the Enterprise,
primarily because of the help Picard has lent to the Klingons in the
past.
Picard assigns Worf to keep Kell briefed, despite Kell's objections that
Worf's discommendation make the situation "awkward."
Meanwhile, Geordi is being broken by the Romulans. Sub-Commander Taibak
[note: I'm guessing at his rank, but since his superior is a Commander,
it
makes sense], with a shadowy partner, welcomes the captive and bound
Geordi.
After a double for Geordi (not an exact duplicate, but one looking fairly
similar) heads off to Risa with instructions not to enjoy himself TOO
much,
Taibak removes Geordi's VISOR and hooks a machine directly to Geordi's
visual
cortex. The result of this is that Taibak can beam images directly
to
Geordi's brain, with all the attendant effects on Geordi's body and
psyche.
First he is shown suffering, then relief, then suffering again: "When
our
work is done, LaForge will act normally, totally unaware of his
conditioning--a perfect tool for our purpose," says Taibak--and there will
be
no physical evidence of their work at all. Geordi howls in agony as Taibak
alters the settings once more...
Kell and Worf examine the details of the rebellion. Two neutral
freighters
have been attacked (1 Ferengi, 1 Cardassian), and the pattern would
suggest
the rebels are hiding in a nearby asteroid belt, which shields them from
sensors. After Worf bristles at a suggestion that the Federation may
be
helping them, Kell apologizes. He then thanks Worf on behalf of "some
members
of the High Council", for killing Duras. He dismisses the fact that
Worf did
so for personal reasons, not political ones: "What matters is that
you acted
on that day--as a true Klingon."
Geordi then passes his first test, and kills a fake Chief O'Brien in a Romulan
mock-up of 10-Forward. Although he eventually does so, he hesitates
enough
that Taibak orders another session.
Days later. The Enterprise is at Krios, and Geordi has just
returned,
ostensibly from Risa. He banters with Data a bit (chuckling when Data,
true
to form, completely misses a joke), and reports back to Picard on the
bridge,
where Picard tells him they'll need his help shortly in analyzing whatever
evidence Governor Vagh comes up with. Picard and Kell leave to beam down,
and
Data detects a brief "blip" of E-band radiation, which is rare enough
that
Riker orders him to check it out before Riker too leaves for beam-down.
Governor Vagh is NOT a happy Klingon. He tells Picard, Riker and Kell
that
Federation medical supplies have been found in rebel strongholds.
Riker
points out that the Federation has never restricted access to their
medical
supplies--and Vagh responds by asking about their weapons and tossing a phaser
rifle to Picard. It appears to be legitimate Federation issue, and
after
Vagh agrees to let them take it up to the ship to examine it ("I have
hundreds
more," he says), he angrily points out that the Federation has much to gain
by
Kriosian independence, for Krios is the only colony close to the
Federation/Klingon border, and would thus be a valuable buffer zone in case
of
attack. After he accuses Picard of "speaking the lies of a tar-kekh!"
and
Picard responds in kind, Picard, Riker, and Kell beam up.
Geordi, meanwhile, gets back to Engineering. Everything's running
smoothly,
so he leaves to "take care of something." That something, as it
turns out, is
to go to 10-Forward, where he walks up to O'Brien and spills a drink on
him.
He apologizes, and O'Brien dismisses it with a smile and goes off to
change.
Later, Geordi and Data test the phaser rifle. Everything looks legitimate
on
the first test, but the energy output of the crystal is TOO efficient.
They
check the waveform pattern, and conclude that the rifle was charged via
forced
pulse, which is NOT Federation standard. There are 327 systems known that
use
that method, but Geordi knocks that down with a little common sense.
"Who has
the most to gain from a conflict between the Federation and the Klingon
Empire?"
Clunk. Geordi tosses the rifle back onto the table down in Vagh's
chambers.
"The Romulans." His argument is persuasive, but Vagh is still
skeptical, and
says that he's going to have his own people check it out. The
Enterprise
people and Kell beam back up. Data calls Riker over, having detected a
second
E-band "blip", but with a different intensity, thus ruling out a
stationary
source. Worried that it may be some form of Romulan communication, Riker
has
Data retune the scatters to pinpoint a direction next time it occurs.
In cargo bay 4, Geordi reprograms some chips, diverts power to the
transporters from a secondary system, diverts transporter control to
planetary
sensors, and beams off a cache of weapons. Once he's ascertained that
the
computer is erasing all memory of having done this, he leaves--and arrives
on
the bridge just in time to hear a VERY angry Vagh accuse Picard of
smuggling
arms to the rebels. Vagh, understandably, will not listen to Picard's
claims
of innocence, and orders them not to leave orbit, sending up an attack
cruiser
and 2 Birds of Prey to punctuate his point.
Data quickly ascertains that there was an unauthorized transport, but
nobody
can track it down as of yet. After Kell says he's managed to talk Vagh
into
checking with the High Council (gaining only a few hours at best), Geordi
and
Data search through the power systems. They eventually find that the
power
was diverted from a replicator waveguide, and trace it to the cargo
bay.
O'Brien checks out the cargo transporter and finds no evidence of any
tampering, thus suggesting that the evidence was erased. Worf asks who
might
be capable of doing this, and Geordi lists only 4 names: himself, Lt.
Kosta,
Data, and O'Brien. Everybody but Geordi has an alibi, though, and
Geordi
gives his word that he was in his quarters alone. They begin a detailed
scan
on every chip to try to hunt down a trail.
Geordi and Data brief Picard and Kell a short time later: the chips
were
programmed to erase all evidence of operator commands shortly after
transport.
They're working on the tiny residuals left by the chips to track it down.
As
Data is called away by Riker (a third E-band blip, which Kell asks about
with
great curiosity), Picard asks Kell to tell Vagh that they're doing all
they
can--and that if necessary, he _will_ defend his ship. Kell agrees,
and
suggests inviting Vagh up to observe the investigation firsthand.
Picard
agrees to that, and bids the ambassador farewell.
Kell is eating in his quarters, when the door sounds. "Come in, Mr.
LaForge."
Geordi does. "The investigation is moving faster than we expected;
you're in
danger of being exposed. I will transport to the surface and when I
return,
I'll have Governor Vagh with me. Your captain and I will bring him to
the
cargo bay--I want you to kill him there, in front of witnesses. Use a
hand
phaser. When he is dead, you will claim that you acted on behals of
Starfleet
in support of Kriosian independence." "I understand," says
Geordi, and leaves
Kell to enjoy his meal.
That evening, Geordi wakes from a nightmare and calls O'Brien--but then
doesn't understand why he did so and apologizes. He goes to visit Beverly
for
insomnia problems, but she finds nothing physically wrong (aside from a
very
slight, not-at-all serious abnormality in the visual cortex) and gives him
a
somnetic inducer to help in the short term. Kell and Vagh, with two
guards,
beam up and are escorted to the cargo bay.
Data, meanwhile, has pinpointed the transmissions. The first and
third
occurrences came from within the Enterprise itself, while the second was
planetside. He speculates that it's being used by Romulan agents somehow,
but
needs more to go on. Is there any match with any Romulan form of
communication? Negative. Any match with ANY known
communication? Negative.
Any match with ANYTHING? Yes--a human brainwave pattern. "What
sort of
receiver would be capable of processing these signals?" "A
system designed to
modify the electromagnetic spectrum and carry those messages directly to
the
human brain," replies the computer.
In a reflection of Geordi's computer console in his quarters, we see
Geordi
pick up a phaser and leave his quarters.
Data checks Geordi's shuttle--everything seems to be shipshape. Geordi is
in
the turbolift.
In the cargo bay, O'Brien certifies that that is the _only_ transporter
that
has been tampered with. Geordi leaves the lift and walks down the corridor
to
the bay.
Data examines the shuttle more carefully, and finds evidence of
microscopic
stresses which suggest a tractor beam. Geordi enters the bay,
visually
follows Vagh, and is interrupted by O'Brien, who asks him for some help.
Data finds that the computer chips in the shuttle have some subtle
flaws.
"Probable cause?" "Replication." Further,
replication with patterns
identical to those used by Romulan replicators. O'Brien leaves Geordi,
who
begins looking over Vagh again.
Data hails Geordi, but gets no response. After determining that Geordi is
in
the cargo bay, he hails Worf. "Data to Lt. Worf: Priority
One." "Go ahead."
"Take Commander LaForge into custody immediately."
"Sir?" "That is an
order."
Worf attempts to do so, but is stopped by Vagh's guards. He calls out
a
warning, and Picard deflects Geordi's shot just in time. Vagh is shaken,
but
convinced the Federation is treacherous, until Data arrives to explain
that
Geordi was acting under Romulan conditioning: the E-band signals were
being
sent directly to Geordi's brain. When Kell demands to know who was
sending
these signals to Geordi, Data replies that the signals must be very
close-range. Only two people were with Geordi all three times the
signals
were detected: Picard, and Ambassador Kell. Kell refuses to be
searched for
a transmitter by anyone on board. Vagh agrees--"We will take the
ambassador
with us...and search him ourselves." Kell requests asylum, which
Picard will
be happy to grant--"WHEN you have been absolved of this crime."
Kell, Vagh,
and the two guards depart.
We close with Geordi and Troi. Geordi is visibly shaken by his experience,
in
part because he vividly remembers his experiences ON RISA. Troi manages
to
break through the bare surface level of the conditioning, but tells Geordi
this will take a long time. But they will reconstruct his memory
eventually,
together.
Wheeeeeeeeeeewwwww. Just writing the SYNOPSIS wore me out. :-)
You can
probably guess that I liked this one based on that, huh? Well, let me
give
some details here.
Wow. I don't even really know where to begin. Wait a sec--here's
something.
TNG, folks, has now officially crossed the line. What line is that?
The line
into serialization. No, I don't mean the continued references to Worf's
discommendation, although that's a great part of it. I am referring to
the
DELIBERATE leaving of loose ends which we know will be tied shortly.
Worf's
discommendation is one of these--we know it's going to be resolved a scant
three weeks from now, in "Redemption". But there are others.
For one thing, we don't know why Kell did what he did. I have very
strong
suspicions that we'll find this out in three weeks as well, along with a
few
more answers about the extent of Klingon-Romulan dealings. More on that in
a
little while.
And then, there's the one, true sign of a serialized show: the
introduction
of a mystery character whose identity will shortly be revealed. I am
referring, of course, to Taibak's mysterious superior, whom we heard
speak,
but only saw cloaked in darkness. Who is that woman?
Well, I don't know who the character is. However, the voice she spoke with
is
completely unmistakable. *That*, friends, is Denise Crosby. No ifs,
ands, or
buts. Accept no substitutes. We've been wondering how she's going to
come
back to TNG ever since we heard she was returning in
"Redemption". Well, now
we know at least the beginning of the picture, and damn, I'm happy to see
it.
(In part, this means we can finally, FINALLY, lay to rest all of this
"daughter of the Ent-C Tasha" nonsense.) It is the fact that we
MUST see more
of this person in "Redemption" if anything we've heard through the
grapevine
is correct that leads me to my claim of serialization.
Well, I've been campaigning for serialization of TNG for a good long time,
so
it's a given that any show which manages to unequivocally do so will get
praise from me for that alone. But "The Mind's Eye" had more
than just that.
Oh, boy, did it ever.
I've had a few run-ins with "edge-of-your-seat" TNG before, where
the
commercial breaks seem to run for two hours rather than two minutes. Some
of
them were excitement-based, such as "Yesterday's Enterprise".
Some of them
were mystery-based, such as "The Defector", "Clues", and
"Conspiracy". "The
Mind's Eye" falls firmly into the latter category, although even after much
of
the mystery had been revealed I still wanted to see the end. I was
wracking
my brains for most of the show trying to guess exactly who Geordi was
being
aimed at. I'm a little smug right now, 'cos I guessed right.
(Though, to be
fair, there were really only two clear choices: Kell or Vagh, and since
Kell
was a more obvious one, I chose Vagh. Nice to see that I can think like
the
writers sometimes.) But man, was it heaven getting there.
The show had one or two minor problems. I thought the scene of Geordi's
conditioning was a little too "talky", for instance (possibly my only
real
objection to the show, but we'll see). Much of Taibak's speechmaking can
be
chalked up to the fact that he wanted Geordi to hear exactly what was to
be
done with him, I suspect, but not all of it. A little slow...and Geordi's
scream at the end of the scene didn't quite work. But that's a minor flaw
in
an otherwise terrific show.
Apart from that one scene, LeVar Burton did a terrific job. In fact, I
can't
think of anyone who did a lousy job for this particular show. Sirtis,
for
example, had only two real scenes, and surprisingly managed to excel in
both
of them. Her banter with Geordi early on rang more true to me than most
of
the "people-talk" scenes (certainly far more so than her girl-talk
with Bev in
the salon scene in "The Host"), and her therapy session with Geordi at
the end
did everything but have me on my feet screaming "YES! That's what you
keep a
counselor like Troi around FOR! Why didn't you show us something like that
in
the FIRST place?!?!?!?" Bravo.
Special commendations have to go to Larry Dobkin as Ambassador Kell, one
of
the most three-dimensional guest-stars I've seen in a long time. Among
other
things, it's often easy to tell who the bad guy is; but I didn't guess
that
Kell was a Rihan agent until just seconds before Geordi rang at his door.
As
soon as I saw him eating, I said "that man is looking a little too
smug...what
the hell is he up to?"; but until that scene, I hadn't a clue that he was
up
to no good. Rather the reverse: I was starting to like the
guy. Very, VERY
good work.
The plot was, in my opinion, virtually airtight. (It was certainly
riveting,
but it can be riveting and still filled with holes.) I can think of one
and
only one thing which people might object to (which probably means there'll
be
around 15 :-) ), which is this: why didn't Data order Worf to get Geordi
out
of the way as soon as he realized the signals could only be beamed to a
VISOR,
rather than going to the shuttle as he did? I'm not entirely sure I have
an
answer to that, but it would hardly have changed the situation all THAT
much,
so it's a minor problem. (Besides, it made wonderful dramatic sense to
have
things unfold the way they did, but I'll get to that in a second.)
Now for the directing: whew. David Livingston is a rookie TNG
director,
although he's been a producer for a while. But if this isn't just a fluke
for
him, then keep him directing until he drops. Many of the scenes were
put
together so very well...took my breath away. Some of it was
actor-dependent,
of course; the cuts back and forth at the end wouldn't have worked half as
well as they did if Spiner hadn't given the good performance he did during
those scenes ("That is an order." Brr...), but those shots
strike me as VERY
difficult to pull off correctly. (I tried to get across in my synop just
how
"blam-blam-blam" they were in their pacing, but I doubt I succeeded;
it's just
not something you can do with letters on a page.) The shot of Geordi
from
inside the cargo bay chip compartment (for want of a better phrase :-) )
was
good as well, and the shots of Geordi during his journey to the lift were
downright eerie. (If they'd just used this guy for "Identity
Crisis", I'd
probably have loved it to ribbons.) Exceedingly nice.
Now, some short points (some whimsical, some not):
--Hmm. Ambassador Kell. Romulan Sub-Commander Taibak. Anybody
else get the
feeling that Echevarria and Schafer just finished reading a heavy dose of
David Eddings? :-)
--Now, a more serious point. Kell thanks Worf on behalf of "some
members" of
the High Council for killing Duras. That could be completely legitimate,
and
that could also just have been small talk to put Worf off his guard.
But
suppose it's more subtle than that. Suppose that Kell and his friends on
the
Council are ALL Romulan agents. Why might they have been happy to see
Duras
dead? Could it be that Duras was not only not entirely guilty of the
crimes
he was accused of in "Reunion", but that he was completely
INNOCENT? (I'm not
going so far as to say he's innocent of K'Ehleyr's murder, because if
nothing
else that would offend my own personal sense of satisfaction when he was
killed.) Could it be that Duras's father's disgrace had made Duras all
the
more anti-Romulan, and that Duras would have been a diligent seeker-out of
the
traitors on the Council? Could it be that Gowron is one of Kell's
associates,
and that Worf was indirectly responsible for betraying the Empire as a
result
of his own personal prejudices and vengeance? I don't know, but it sounds
to
me like there's the makings of a really meaty story in there. We can
but
watch, and wait.
--Dennis McCarthy turned in some nice music this go-round. I
particularly
liked the low, dark theme that played as the final sequence of
Data-Geordi-Data-Geordi-O'Brien-Geordi-etc. scenes began.
--Okay. I wasn't the only one screaming "stock footage!" when
they had the
attack cruiser and the two Birds o'Prey on-screen, was I? :-) But they
made up
for it with the nice shot of the shuttle trapped under the Warbird, and
with
both the Romulan and Klingon transporters. (Particularly the Klingon
ones--they seem a lot faster, more brusque, than the Fed transporters.
Makes
sense to me.)
--It would only take a few hours to talk to the Council via subspace from
Krios? Wow...either Klinzhai is way out of the physical center of the
Empire
[hardly unheard-of...Terminus ran the Federation from one edge of the
galaxy
in Asimov's Foundation series], or the Empire is a LOT smaller than the
Federation. Mighty intriguing either way...
--And in the "speak of the devil" department...just after a rerun of
"The
Wounded", in comes a reference to the Cardassians. You know, if real
problems
do develop with the Romulans and Klingons, this would be a really lousy
time
for the Cardassians to open up another front...
I think I'll stop now. It's late, and besides, this is coming up on
record
length, if it hasn't already reached it. I'll just say: see
this. Now. TNG
has now firmly put itself on the serialized path, and I for one am mighty
pleased.
Now, for the numbers:
Plot: 9. A smidgeon off for the "why didn't Data act
earlier" question, but
that's all.
Plot Handling: 9.5. An even smidgier smidgeon off for the talkiness
of the
conditioning sequence.
Characterization: 9.5, for the same reason.
TOTAL: after rounding up half a point for good effects and music, we have
a
10...is that the first 10 since "The Nth Degree"? Might
be. Nice work.
NEXT WEEK:
Data's in wuvvv...I'll wait and see. (Like I have a choice in the
matter...:-) )
Tim Lynch (Cornell's first Astronomy B.A.; one of many Caltech grad students)
BITNET: tlynch@citjuliet
INTERNET: tlynch@juliet.caltech.edu
UUCP: ...!ucbvax!tlynch%juliet.caltech.edu@hamlet.caltech.edu
"Motives? Who cares of motives? Humans, perhaps."
--Ambassador Kell
--
Copyright 1991, Timothy W. Lynch. All rights reserved, but feel free to
ask...
This article is explicitly prohibited from being used in any off-net
compilation without due attribution and *express written consent of the
author*. Walnut Creek and other CD-ROM distributors, take note.
Related Links:
Where
to Watch - Local channels and airtimes.
VHS, Laserdisc and DVD availability.
Cast:
Patrick Stewart as Jean-Luc Picard
Jonathan Frakes as William Thomas Riker
Brent Spiner as Data
LeVar Burton as Geordi La Forge
Michael Dorn as Worf
Gates McFadden as Beverly Crusher
Marina Sirtis as Deanna Troi
Guest Cast:
Larry Dobkin as Ambassador Kell
Edward Wiley as Vagh
Colm Meaney as O'Brien
John Fleck as Taibak
Creative staff:
Director: David Livingston
Story By: Ken Schafer and Rene Echevarria
Teleplay By: Rene Echevarria